Abstract

Range Creek Canyon, located within the Book Cliffs of eastern Utah, contains some of the most abundant and well-preserved archaeological sites in North America. Its cliffs and landscapes provide a canvas for rock art panels and a foundation for granaries, ruins, and artifacts of the prehistoric Fremont Indians. In order to place these Range Creek sites within a geologic context, an illustrated geologic field guide was created for the general public. The guide focuses on the major bedrock formations that crop out in the canyon, as well as many indicators that facilitate geologic interpretation of these rocks. Outcrops of the Paleogene Flagstaff and Colton Formations (~58 to 48 million years old) in Range Creek Canyon were investigated in order to interpret their depositional environments. The lacustrine Flagstaff Limestone contains limestone beds and fossils of freshwater gastropods, oysters, and turtles indicative of lake environments. The unit coarsens upward with an increase of interbedded sandstone, which was deposited in and near ancient river channels. This trend suggests dynamic levels of the ancient lake, with overall encroachment of river systems near the contact with the Colton Formation. The fluvial Colton Formation is characterized by discontinuous, stacked beds of sandstone, representing a succession of migrating river channels and floodplain deposits. The Colton Formation exhibits a general upward trend of increased grain size and increased channel belt (continuous sandstone beds) frequency and lateral extent, implying a transition to higher energy river systems through time. These dynamic, ancient rivers may have been flowing generally northward into Eocene Lake Uinta, recorded in deposits of the Green River Formation north of Range Creek Canyon.

Highlights

  • Range Creek Canyon is an isolated canyon located southeast of Price, Utah, within the Book Cliffs in Emery County

  • Range Creek Canyon was discovered by white settlers in 1884 and was used primarily for cattle ranching until recently

  • Smaller-scale features within the Colton Formation that characterize the fluvial depositional system include cross-bedding within the sandstone, which indicates direction of water flow; channel scours, which are indicative of erosion at the base of river channels; and other sedimentary features such as channel lags, which contain larger-grained pebbles, indicating higher energy of a river channel (Stop #5 and corresponding figures)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Range Creek Canyon is an isolated canyon located southeast of Price, Utah, within the Book Cliffs (west of Desolation Canyon between the Book and Roan Cliffs) in Emery County (figure 1). Range Creek Canyon was discovered by white settlers in 1884 and was used primarily for cattle ranching until recently. The Wilcox family held the ranch until 2001, when it was sold to the U.S Bureau of Land Management. Ownership was Nieminski, N.M., and Johnson, C.L., 2014, A guide to the bedrock geology of Range Creek Canyon, Book Cliffs, Utah: Geology of the Intermountain West, v. A Guide to the Bedrock Geology of Range Creek Canyon, Book Cliffs, Utah Nieminski, N.M., and Johnson, C.L

Cherry Meadow
Geneva Coal Mine at Horse Canyon
Horse Canyon Pass
Gas Well Dry-Hole Marker
Locomotive Rock
Nelson Canyon
Mud Plug Granary
Dilly Canyon
Findings
Wilcox Ranch
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